Jumat, 20 Maret 2015

After escaping Altamont and Scientology

After escaping Altamont and Scientology, he was born again in a trash dumpBy Mark Ellis, Special to ASSIST News ServiceSANGKHLABURI, Thailand (March 16, 2015) -- Rolling Stone
magazine called the free concert at Altamont Speedway on December 6,
1969 rock and roll’s worst day. With the Hell’s Angels guarding the
stage in exchange for $500 in beer, the ensuing violence-tainted
quagmire resulted in four deaths, four births, scores injured, and a
countercultural black eye to those hoping for another Woodstock.
The concert began with Santana, then featured Jefferson Airplane, The
Flying Burrito Brothers, and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. The
Grateful Dead were scheduled to perform next, but refused to play due to
the rising tide of discord and violence. The final act featured the
Rolling Stones, who should not have gone on stage.
“The Rolling Stones came on, then the sun went down and they started
singing ‘Sympathy for the devil’ and Lucifer descended to receive
worship,” recalls Tom Ravensberg, who attended the event with his
brother, along with 300,000 others.
The Hell’s Angels drank their allotment of beer most of the day in
front of the stage and were highly inebriated. The crowd became hostile
and unpredictable, attacking each other, the Hell’s Angels, and the
performers. The Hell’s Angels armed themselves with sawed-off pool cues
and motorcycle chains to drive the crowd further back from the stage.
“The Hell’s Angels pulled a bus in and were throwing full cans of
beer, hitting people in the head with full cans of beer,” Ravensberg
recounts. “All the bands came on and I wasn’t a Christian but I thought
it was so wicked I told my brother, ‘We’re leaving.’ The Hell’s Angels
stabbed a guy to death right after we left.”
Looking back, Ravensberg had a rough upbringing in Southern
California. “I was clinically depressed from age eight,” he says. “I was
so depressed. I was looking for love and couldn’t find it at home so at
17 I started smoking pot and dropping LSD and I was sure I would meet
God in outer space.”
His father attempted to impose a measure of discipline and enforce
boundaries for the young rebel. “My dad told me if I got a haircut, went
to church with them on Sunday, do all the yard work, pay room and
board, you can stay here or you can pack your bags.”
Ravensberg decided he couldn’t stomach these constraints, so he
crammed his belongings into the back of a Volkswagen bug, where he lived
for a year.MORENote: Please feel free to re-publish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)Read more